[WASHINGTON, DC] – U.S. Senators Richard Blumenthal (D-CT), Elizabeth Warren (D-MA), and Adam Schiff (D-CA) this week wrote to the leading fundraiser and lobbyists working to coordinate private donations for President Trump’s multi-million-dollar White House ballroom project. According to recent reporting, Meredith O’Rourke, the Trump campaign’s lead finance operative, is coordinating with lobbyists with close ties to the Trump Administration to solicit donations for the ballroom from major corporations, Big Tech companies, and billionaires with interests before the Administration. Blumenthal, Warren, and Schiff are demanding answers from O’Rourke and the lobbyists she is working with about how the fundraising is being organized and coordinated, how donors are being identified and solicited, and what promises may have been or may yet be made in exchange for these substantial contributions.
“Soliciting hundreds of millions of dollars in private donations to build a White House ballroom bearing the president’s name raises questions that Americans deserve to have answered. Many of the donors to the project have deep financial, business, or other personal interests before the Administration,” the Senators wrote.
The Senators continued, “Indeed, a recent report revealed that more than half of the Trump Ballroom donors are facing, or have recently faced, enforcement actions from the federal government and that ballroom donors have received more than $279 billion in federal contracts in the last five years. And, another report found that two-thirds of the corporate ballroom funders are represented by one of the three lobbying firms identified as coordinating the ballroom funding.”
Blumenthal has written to each of the reported donors to the White House ballroom project as well as donors previously kept secret by the White House to seek information about the terms of their donations and any potential deals made in exchange for contributions.
The full text of the letter sent to O’Rourke is available here and below. Similar letters were sent to Jeffrey Miller, CEO of Miller Strategies LLC; Reince Priebus, President & Chief Strategist of Michael Best Strategies LLC; and Brian Ballard, President of Ballard Partners.
November 18, 2025
Meridith O’Rourke
Owner
The O’Rourke Group
Tallahassee, FL
Dear Ms. O’Rourke:
Since July 2025, President Trump has solicited $300 million in private donations to build what has been presented to donors and the public as “the President Donald J. Trump Ballroom” (“Trump Ballroom”).[1] Despite assurances from the White House that the President has been “incredibly transparent” about the renovations,[2] critical details about the plans for the project have changed numerous times, including its total cost and scope.[3] Indeed, the cost of the project has been projected to jump 50 percent to $300 million from a previous projection of $200 million.[4] Moreover, recent reporting has revealed that the donation pledge form for the Trump Ballroom offers donors the option to donate without public disclosure and that, in fact, a significant number of private donors to the project had been kept secret by the White House, completely belying the Administration’s claims of transparency, and raising serious questions about the identity and motivation for these donors.[5] The sheer amount of fundraising necessary to complete this project has clearly required coordination and expertise. Recent news reporting indicated that these efforts are being led by one of the Trump campaign’s leading fundraisers, in coordination with three lobbyists with close ties to the Administration.[6] Given your reported role in this fundraising effort, we write to request information regarding your efforts to raise money for the construction of the Trump Ballroom.
Soliciting hundreds of millions of dollars in private donations to build a White House ballroom bearing the president’s name raises questions that Americans deserve to have answered. Many of the donors to the project have deep financial, business, or other personal interests before the Administration.[7] Indeed, a recent report revealed that more than half of the Trump Ballroom donors are facing, or have recently faced, enforcement actions from the federal government and that ballroom donors have received more than $279 billion in federal contracts in the last five years.[8] And, another report found that two-thirds of the corporate ballroom funders are represented by one of the three lobbying firms identified as coordinating the ballroom funding.[9] Many questions remain about the fundraising for this project, including how the fundraising is being organized and coordinated, how donors are being identified and solicited, the amount of each contribution, any agreement reached with each contributor, what promises may have been or may yet be made in exchange for these substantial contributions, the reasons donations were permitted to be made anonymously, and the extent of any pledges and donations that have not yet been disclosed.[10] The American people are entitled to all the relevant facts about who is funding the most substantial construction project at the White House in recent history.
As one of the parties raising private donations for the construction of the Trump Ballroom, you and your firm possess critical information about the Administration’s management of this project, how contributions have been obtained, and what President Trump or his representatives may have agreed to provide in exchange. To assist our offices in our inquiry into the financing of the demolition of the East Wing and construction of the Trump Ballroom, please preserve all documents, records,[11] and communications[12] related to contributions to the Trump Ballroom, and provide the following information by December 4, 2025:
Please contact our offices if you have any questions about responding to these requests. Thank you for your attention to this matter.
Sincerely,
-30-
[1] Kenneth P. Vogel, Trump’s Team Offers to Keep Some Ballroom Donors Incognito, N.Y. Times (Nov. 1, 2025), https://www.nytimes.com/2025/11/01/us/politics/trumps-team-offers-to-keep-some-ballroom-donors-incognito.html.
[2] The National Desk, Karoline Leavitt faces barrage of questions over Trump's White House ballroom construction, cost, YouTube (Oct. 23, 2025), https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z988ECzreSI.
[3] Zachary Small and Ashley Wu, Architects Urged a Review of Trump’s Ballroom. Cue the Demolition Crew., N.Y. Times (Oct. 21, 2025), https://www.nytimes.com/2025/10/21/arts/design/trump-ballroom-architects-review.html.
[4] Private funds flowing into government spaces threaten transparency and accountability, Opensecrets.org (Oct. 24, 2025), https://www.opensecrets.org/news/2025/10/private-funds-flowing-into-government-spaces-threaten-transparency-and-accountability; Sarah Fortinsky, Trump says White House ballroom will be ‘a little bigger’ than initially described, The Hill (Sept. 14, 2025), https://thehill.com/homenews/administration/5503161-trump-white-house-ballroom-bigger-capacity/; Kit Maher, Jake Tapper & Alejandra Jaramillo, White House releases list of donors for Trump’s multi-million-dollar ballroom, CNN Politics (Oct. 23, 2025), https://www.cnn.com/2025/10/23/politics/ballroom-donors-white-house-trump.
[5] Kenneth P. Vogel, Trump’s Team Offers to Keep Some Ballroom Donors Incognito, N.Y. Times (Nov. 1, 2025), https://www.nytimes.com/2025/11/01/us/politics/trumps-team-offers-to-keep-some-ballroom-donors-incognito.html.
[6] Kenneth P. Vogel, Trump’s Team Offers to Keep Some Ballroom Donors Incognito, N.Y. Times (Nov. 1, 2025), https://www.nytimes.com/2025/11/01/us/politics/trumps-team-offers-to-keep-some-ballroom-donors-incognito.html.
[7] Cat Zakrzewski and Jonathan Edwards, Trump wants a White House ballroom. These companies are funding it., Wash. Post (Oct. 15, 2025), https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2025/10/15/trump-ballroom-donations-companies/.
[8] Jonathan Edwards, Report: Donors to Trump’s White House ballroom have $279B in federal contracts, Washi. Post (Nov. 3, 2025), https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2025/11/03/trump-ballroom-donors-contracts-enforcement/.
[9] Jon Golinger, Ballroom Lobby-Blitz Creates New Favor-Seeking Opportunities for Lobbyists, Public Citizen (Nov. 17, 2025).
[10] Victoria Bisset, Here are the donors contributing to Trump’s White House ballroom, Wash. Post (Oct. 24, 2025), https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2025/10/24/trump-white-house-ballroom-donors-list/.
[11] For purposes of this request, “records” include any written, recorded, or graphic material of any kind, including letters, memoranda, reports, notes, electronic data (emails, email attachments, and any other electronically-created or stored information), direct messages, chats, calendar entries, inter-office communications, meeting minutes, phone/voice mail or recordings/records of verbal communications, and drafts (whether or not they resulted in final documents).
[12] For purposes of this request, “communications” include any records, as defined above, transmitted in any way between two or more individuals or entities.